Yang, known as the Queen of Porcelain Art, is one of the few porcelain design artists in the country who has received international acclaim.

Recently, she was commissioned to create a showpiece mural at Hong Kong’s Maritime Square shopping complex.

Yang came from an impoverished background and did not receive a higher education, yet she has earned a top-notch reputation after overcoming difficulties throughout her life.

Born in Taipei, she gave up pursuing education after high school, when her father passed away.

The family’s economic burden fell on Yang’s shoulders, and at the age of 19 she entered the job market.

She began at the China Pottery and Porcelain Arts Co, which was near her home, beginning as an apprentice.

Here she learned to copy patterns and designs from master craftsmen to decorate the Blue-White Porcelain product lines at the company’s factory.

For eight months, she learned the techniques and skills required to paint designs on porcelain.

Afterward, she became an understudy to master painter Yu Chung-lin (喻仲林), who was famous for works using birds and flowers in the classic Chinese style.

At that time, Yang also prepared to publish a collection of her paintings.

“When you master a craft, it becomes yours. Others cannot steal it from you,” she said.

At 20, she went to work at a colored-paper factory, where her design and art compositions have been put to good use.

In the next five years, Yang became a promising star in the art world as her drawings of birds, flowers and natural scenes won awards at painting competitions in Taipei, Kaohsiung and at other big national events.

Her rising fame was capped off with a solo exhibition, at the age of 25, organized by a leading art gallery.

At the age of 38, she had presented a dozen solo exhibitions at major art institutions, including the National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts in Greater Taichung.

However, that year was a turning point for Yang, as her marriage broke down in divorce.

Yang said the divorce left her with very little in her possession. Thus she decided to start her life anew, by relocating to Yingge, where she got a job at Tai-Hwa Pottery Co.

In Yingge, she began by decorating ceramics for other artists.

Yang moved in a new direction by completely abandoning bird and flower paintings, on which her earlier fame was based.

She revisited the Blue-White Porcelain style from her days as a 19-year-old apprentice, and used it to develop her own series of porcelain works called Chubby Dolls.

Chubby Dolls was initially met with derision by the art world, as critics likened her new design to children with Down’s syndrome.

From that point on, Yang cemented her reputation as the Queen of Porcelain Art in Taiwan.

Chen Chun-lan (陳春蘭), director of the Yingge Ceramics Museum in New Taipei City, said Yang does not merely combine painting with porcelain art, but also has the ability to place art in people’s everyday life.